This appeal presents the issue of the application of Michigan’s tolling statute to a prisoner’s § 1983 claim. On October 29, 1985, appellant Edward Lewis Higley, a prisoner of the Michigan Department of Corrections, filed a complaint pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the district court. Appellant sued the Michigan Department of Corrections and various officers thereof for violations of his rights under the eighth and fourteenth amendments. The occurrence giving rise to his claims was his transfer, on September 24, 1982, from the Reception and Guidance Center at the State Prison of Southern Michigan directly to a punitive segregation unit at the prison without being afforded a due process hearing. The district court dismissed appellant’s claim, finding it time barred under Michigan’s three-year limitation period, M.S.A. § 27A.5805(8), [M.C.A. § 600.5805(8) ]. Higley appeals the dismissal.
Federal law requires that § 1983 claims should be characterized as actions involving personal injuries for statute of limitations purposes.
Wilson v. Garcia,
In the instant case, these principles call into question two Michigan statutes, M.S.A. § 27A.5805, [M.C.A. § 600.5805] (Supp.1987) (a three-year limitation on personal injury actions) and M.S.A. § 27A.5851(1), [M.C.A. § 600.5851(1)] (Supp.1987): (“[I]f the person first entitled to ... bring an action is ... imprisoned at the time the claim accrues, the person ... shall have 1 year after the disability is removed through death or otherwise, to make the entry or bring the action although the period of limitations has run_”) This appeal turns on the application and interpretation of these statutes.
Other courts have considered this same question under other state tolling statutes. The Fifth Circuit, in considering Texas’ tolling statute, originally held that an imprisoned civil rights plaintiff was entitled to invoke the tolling provisions of the statute only with reference to the period of his incarceration during which access to the federal courts was not freely available to state prisoners.
Miller v. Smith,
We believe that other cases have ana
1
lyzed the issue more fully than did the court in
Miller
and
Hernandez.
See
Major v. Arizona State Prison,
Although this court has not ruled directly on the question, the majority of district courts in this circuit that have addressed the issue have found that state tolling statutes should not be applied to toll a prisoner’s § 1983 claim.
See Perotti v. Carty,
The Michigan courts’ only recent consideration of the tolling statute was
Hawkins v. Justin,
Although
Hawkins
did not deal with the application of the tolling statute to a § 1983 claim, the court’s reasoning was not specific to the libel context, and its language suggests that the Michigan courts might also apply the statute in a civil rights case. This conclusion is strengthened by the Michigan legislature’s 1986 amendment of the tolling statute, which left the imprisonment disability intact.
Cf. Vargas v. Jago,
If we were to conclude that under Michigan law the tolling statute would apply to appellant’s § 1983 claim, we must next consider whether that result is inconsistent with federal law. Each of the district court decisions in this circuit that have directly addressed the applicability of tolling statutes to § 1983 actions have found that applying the tolling statute would be inconsistent with the policies underlying § 1983. In
Campbell v. Guy,
Although
Campbell
turned at least in part on facts surrounding the particular prisoner-plaintiff, two cases dealing with Ohio’s tolling provision have rejected its applicability based on perceived inconsistency with federal policy.
Perotti v. Carty,
We cannot help but believe that, in order to effect the rehabilitative purpose described above, as well as to deter prison officials from misconduct, quick resolution of disputes is vital. Promptness is even more important, we think, when a prisoner is complaining that his current incarcerators are violating, or have violated, his civil rights. To allow a prisoner one year after his release to bring his section 1983 suit neither would effect deterrence as to the alleged offender, nor rehabilitation as to the alleged victim. Thus, so long as the state system erects no barriers to the federal courts, we regard application of the state disability tolling statute to be “inconsistent” with federal law.
Id.; see also Perotti,
We find the reasoning of
Campbell, Vargas
and
Perotti
persuasive. An important part of the policies underlying § 1983 suits are rehabilitation of the prisoner and deterrence to prevent further inappropriate prison conduct. Each of these policies supports the conclusion that § 1983 claims should be resolved promptly following an alleged constitutional violation, not delayed or postponed due to a lengthy tolling period. To rule otherwise, a prisoner’s claim would remain open to litigation for as long as a prisoner was confined,
cf. In re Jackson Lockdown,
We have determined from court records that Higley has filed at least two other proceedings as an incarcerated prisoner. We are accutely aware of the multitude of cases filed by other Michigan prisoners seeking § 1983 relief in federal courts. 1 The plethora of § 1983 cases filed indicates very clearly the accessibility of federal courts to prisoners such as Higley. There is no logical basis for applying a tolling period to encourage stale claims in the face of such ready availability of a federal forum to hear and to consider these claims. Federal courts have directed that law libraries and some form of counselling be available to prisoners, such as Higley, who may be as well or better off than others who filed § 1983 actions in federal courts. To apply the Michigan tolling statute under such circumstances would, in our view, run counter to federal law and policy.
As appellant’s filing of suit in district court shows, he is in fact not legally disabled by his confinement. Taking into account the particular basis of appellant’s claim for relief relating to the circumstances of a transfer from one prison to another in the Michigan system, we are persuaded that application of a lengthy tolling period
We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of appellant’s action.
Notes
. For example, more than 150 civil rights cases by Michigan prison inmates were filed during the last six months of 1985 in the Eastern District of Michigan, and some 375 such cases in that period were filed altogether in Michigan federal district courts. Thirty-nine new appeals from these cases were filed in the Sixth Circuit during the period July 1985 through December 1985.
